My cats throw up repeatedly until they get rid of the hairball. So I'll
routinely find little pools of liquid on the floor until they get rid of
the hairball.
The first time I ever witnessed this--before I knew anything about cats'
behavior--my new cat was moving around the house and 'throwing up' every
30 seconds it seemed to me. In a total panic, I called the vet, and
remember being really upset because they had to have someone call me
back--they couldn't have someone talk to me right away. This was clearly
an emergency and they didn't seem to understand that! :>)
My vet advised mixing white petroleum jelly into their wet food to help
them get rid of the hairball; that does seem to work well, and so I've
been doing this for years on an irregular basis. He said it's ok to give
it on consecutive days/mealtimes when it seems they're having a
problem--it won't harm them. I try to remember to routinely add it twice
a week to prevent it happening in the first place.
It does seem to me, from my experience, that Loki's throwing up is a
hairball problem. I hope it's stopped now.

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Steve Williams
Sent: Saturday, February 26, 2005 1:44 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: Loki Advice: fleas, throwing up


Loki vomited again last night and I found for the first time a tubular
shaped object that was clearly hair.  Before, it was undigested food.
He
would sometimes vomit not long after, in which case it was a yellow-like
liquid; but I thought that was simply because he had no food in his
stomach
after he had already thrown-up.

I'm hoping the hairball was the problem and will hope he does not vomit
again tonight.  If so, I'll try some things.  Sally also wrote me with
some
great suggestions.

Thanks Michelle.

Steve

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Saturday, February 26, 2005 6:41 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Loki Advice: fleas, throwing up


Does he vomit a tubular shaped vomit with food still visible, or is it
yellow-like liquid with no visible food, or something in-between? It
makes a
difference. If it is the first, it may be hairballs and treatable by
giving
him a
little bit of Laxastat every day. My Patches has that. If it is one of
the
latter, it may be a digestive problem or something else.
Michelle


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